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Michael F. Andrews, PhD

Associate Professor


Bio

Dr. Michael F. Andrews is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Loyola University Chicago and the former Director and Chief Administrator of Loyola’s famed Rome campus (2017-2021) in Italy. Before coming to Loyola in 2017, Dr. Andrews was the McNerney-Hanson University Professor of Ethics (2011-2017) and former dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Portland, where he also directed the University's summer campus in Salzburg and the Catholic Studies Program. Dr. Andrews also served in various academic leadership positions at Seattle University (2002-2011), including dean of the Matteo Ricci College of Humanities, director of the Faith and the Great Ideas Academic and Residential Programs, faculty supervisor for the Sullivan Scholars Program, and director of Seattle University’s "Philosophy of Art" Summer Academic Program in Florence and Rome. He has received numerous awards for teaching excellence, including "Most Inspirational Faculty Award in Recognition of Academic Excellence in Teaching" and twice received the "O Captain, My Captain Outstanding Teacher of the Year" award at Seattle University.

Dr. Andrews is the author of the monograph One (Un)like the Other: Rethinking Ethics, Empathy, and Transcendence from Husserl to Derrida, a volume in the SUNY series in Theology and Continental Thought (Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2024, 348pp). He is the co-editor of Ethics and Metaphysics in the Philosophy of Edith Stein: Applications and Implications, volume XII in the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists Series, ed. Michael F. Andrews and Antonio Calcagno (Dordrecht: Springer Academic Press, 2022, 243pp).

Dr. Andrews has published more than forty peer-reviewed articles and book chapters, including in the official Edith Stein Collected Works presses in Germany (Verlag-Herder) and the USA (Institute of Carmelite Studies Press), and presented over fifty formal papers at some of the most prestigious international academic conferences across five continents, including the American Philosophical Association, the International Husserl Circle, the Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, the Society for Phenomenology and the Human Sciences, the North American Society for Early Phenomenology, the World Phenomenology Institute, the International Max Scheler Society, and the International Association for the Study of the Philosophy of Edith Stein, where he also served two terms on the Executive Board. In 2019, he was an invited keynote speaker and member of the concluding roundtable discussion at the United Nations-sponsored 13th International Conference on Human Rights in Doha, State of Qatar. 

Dr. Andrews' areas of interest include Phenomenology; Existentialism; the History of Philosophy; Philosophy of Religion (Philosophical Theology); Greek and Medieval Metaphysics; Renaissance Philosophy of Art; Ethics (including healthcare, biomedical, and Catholic Social Teaching); and Catholic Intellectual Thought. He writes and speaks on the importance of integrating the social and natural sciences with the arts and humanities in contemporary global Jesuit education. Dr. Andrews publishes and lectures widely on issues related to Jesuit pedagogy, human rights, social and political thought, environmental justice, women's education, social ontology, and cultural empathy, including contemporary issues impacting migrants, immigrants, and refugees. He has taught "great figures" courses and directed undergraduate and graduate theses on Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Thomas Aquinas, Teilhard de Chardin, and Edith Stein. He regularly leads student/faculty/staff/alumni immersion and Ignatian discernment and academic-centered retreat experiences that explore global intersections of faith and justice in places such as Morocco, Sarajevo, Ecuador, Assisi, Spain, and Rome. In 2007-08 Dr. Andrews was appointed Senior International Research Fellow at the Jesuit Historical Institute in Rome.

Originally from Providence, RI, Dr. Andrews is a duel Italian-USA citizen. He is fluent in Italian and has reading proficiency in French, German, Latin, and Russian. He was awarded the BA degree in systematic theology from Georgetown University; the M.A. in philosophical theology from Yale; the Ph.L./M.Phil degree in Greek and medieval metaphysics from the Pontifical Gregorian University (Rome); the M.A. degree in the History of Philosophy and the Ph.D. in Philosophy from Villanova University; and a Higher Education Certificate from the Institute for Management and Leadership in Education at Harvard University. Dr. Andrews is a former member of the New England Province of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits). When he isn’t cooking dinner with friends or writing or tinkering on the piano, he enjoys slaying dragons with his daughter, riding his vespa, and taking long walks along the shore with his wife and their dogs, Bacio and Luna.

Education

PhD, MA                      Villanova University

MPhil / PhL                  Pontifical Gregorian University (Rome, Italy)

MA in Religion             Yale University

BA                              Georgetown University

Research Interests

Phenomenology; Philosophy of Religion (Philosophical Theology); Renaissance Philosophy of Art; Catholic Intellectual Thought / Catholic Social Teaching; The History of Philosophy

Great Figures: Edith Stein, Soren Kierkegaard, Teilhard de Chardin, SJ